1. In Carroll-McCreary v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2 Cir.,
The Tax Court did not disregard these rules, but found the cases inapposite on the ground that “obviously there was substantial consideration flowing from all parties.” We hardly think it obvious; in fact, we are unable to discover any consideration for the reduction of the debt by Mrs. Till. Even if the minority stockholders had been successful in their action, Mrs. Till would not have been required to surrender the note except upon the tender of the value, as of 1929, of the securities she had given in exchange for the note. And that amount was equal to the face amount of the note itself. Thus, Mrs. Till, regardless of the outcome of the suit, was entitled to retain the note or to receive an amount equal to its face value. She received nothing-in return for* a cancellation of a portion of the corporation’s indebtedness to her. We cannot agree with the Tax Court that “Carroll-McCreary Co. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue * * * is not in point.” We think it governs the instant case. 2
*298
2. To reconcile the rationale of the American Dental case, supra, with that of Dobson v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
3. On the question of whether the taxpayer can deduct the payments to the lawyers of Mrs. Till and the minority stockholders, we are again faced with the próblem of the scope of our review of Tax Court decisions. In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Heininger,
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
Notes
Regulation 86, Art. 22(a) -14.
Italics added.
The Tax Court, after finding a lack of donative intent, taxed the cancellation on an analogy to a short sal ■ on the ground that the taxpayer had sold the stock in 1929, and the gain could not be ascertained until the price paid for it was finally determined by the cancellation of part of the debt in 19,‘>5. But we need not consider the questions raised as to the manner of taxation if these, sums, were income rather than gifts.
See Paul, Dobson v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue: The Strange Ways of Law and Fact (1944) 57 Harv.L.Rev. 753, 814 et seq.
See Paul, op.cit., supra note 2a, at 789-791.
See Id. at 848, 849.
